The prosthetic is a Flex-Foot modular III. I liked it a lot, but now have a conventional pylon with a Luxon Journey foot. Take it from me, the hardware is almost meaningless. You gotta have a proper fit or else you get sores which suck the life right out of you. There are good days and bad days.

I was in a motorcycle accident on 7 June 1991. A guy pulled out of a shopping center parking lot and ran me down as I was coasting up to a red light.

Of course he was underinsured. I spent 2 weeks in the hospital and 4 months learning to walk.

Contrary to what some people think of my gun handling skills, or lack thereof, I did NOT shoot myself in the foot.

As far as the sense of humour, you gotta get busy living, or get busy dying.

Rodentman wrote:
Seems to hurt less when I am sitting at my reloading bench.........

If you'd like to hook up and make some 1x,2x 3x brass sometime give me a tap!
It's about time to do some proper outdoor shooting. You in "Southron" MN?
We could probably get Irish and FSNTAC to help make a pile o' brass

The RCBS powder measure that came with the RockChucker kit seems to dribble a tiny bit, hardly noticable until after 100+ rounds....assuming it's normal, I thought when I get set back up I'd just put a Clean Strides insert under the area. (tacky paper for clean room entrances)

I am new to the forum and new to reloading. I have purchased a RockChucker and a full RCBS set up. Looking for advice on mounting locations and bench set up for the most practical flow during reloading. I built an 8'x20" bench with overhead shelf. Looking for any pointers or advice to save the could a should a woulda outcome. Planning on loading .40, .38sp, 30-30, .270, .243, 30-06 as well as the 5.7. Any pics of bench set up would be greatly appreciated.

For what it's worth, here's my set up which works well in a small space.

Back when I lived in an apartment and had very limited space, I bought a sturdy TV stand and set this up. The tumbler is bolted down to keep it from walking of the bench, and the turret press bolts are reinforced underneath with steel plates. The sad thing is, I now have a home and a whole bedroom to devote to reloading, but I still have never gotten around to building a bigger bench. The nice thing about such a small bench top, though, is it forces me to keep it clear. Only what I'm working on at the time can stay on top. Everything else MUST go back on the shelves

It's actually pretty quiet as long as I don't fill it with too much brass (>50). Of course, now I live out on the plains (moved out of Denver to get away from the libs) and I don't have to worry about the noise. My nearest neighbor is hundreds of yards away

When I saw the title to the post I chuckled, thinking to myself "I'd like to see my bench too." Mine has so much crap on it that I can't even use it. I need to clean it up so I can. I have the same bench as c1demo two posts up. I got it at Sam's Club years ago. I have a similar set of drawers under one side and a cabinet under the other side that I store powder and bullets in.

c1demo wrote:I keep my powder, bullets and other supplies on another Sam's Storage shelf not pictured.

I bet I have the same one. Is it about 6 feet tall and about 4 feet wide, with the same stainless steel doors as on the drawers in your picture? I store some of my ammo in mine. It won't all fit in there.

It's because the frakking things won't leave me alone. The grey one in the picture steals casings and carries them around in her mouth like a dog. 5.7 is her favorite but I gave her an aluminum .45 case to go away.